United States Capitol crypt
The United States Capitol crypt is the large circular room filled with forty neoclassical Doric columns directly beneath the United States Capitol rotunda and was built originally to support the rotunda, as well offer an entrance to Washington's Tomb. Presently, it serves as a museum, a repository for six statues of the National Statuary Hall Collection.
Origin and construction
The crypt originated with the initial designs drawn up for the United States Capitol by Doctor William Thornton, which called for a rotunda to be placed between the two wings of the building.[1] The room beneath the rotunda was therefore required to support the large space above it. However, construction did not begin on the central part of the Capitol, where the rotunda and the room beneath it were located, until after the War of 1812.
Construction on the Capitol, itself, began in 1793, when the first American President, George Washington, laid down the cornerstone to the north wing of the building.[2] Upon the death of Washington, in 1799, the designers of the Capitol went to Martha Washington and requested permission to build a tomb for her husband in the Capitol. She acquiesced to this request and plans were made to construct the tomb underneath the floor that supported the rotunda. This area then received the title crypt, as it would serve as the entry to the tomb.
Delays wracked the construction efforts of the Capitol's builders, notably the interruption by the War of 1812, when all construction came to a halt. Then, dramatically in August 1814, the British captured the city of Washington, and set fire to the Capitol, nearly destroying the entire building. Thus, when construction began after the war, in 1815, it initially was to rebuild what had been lost to the fire.[3]
The central section of the Capitol, which housed the rotunda and the crypt, was not completed until 1827, under the oversight of Architect of the Capitol Charles Bulfinch.[4] However, the plans to inter Washington in the Capitol fell apart when attempts were made to retrieve his body from Mount Vernon, the President's home, due to the legal contractions of Washington's will and refusal of the plantation's then owner, John Washington. Thus ended the function of the room as a true crypt, but the name remained regardless.
A marble compass was set into the floor of the chamber to mark the center point of the District of Columbia, where the four quadrants of the city begin.[5]
Present day usage
The crypt serves as the main thoroughfare of the ground floor of the Capitol and is a stop for all Capitol Tours provided through the Capitol Visitor Center.
National Statuary Hall Collection
There are 13 statues from the National Statuary Hall Collection, representing the 13 original states, located in the crypt. They are:
- Robert R. Livingston from New York, bronze, by Erastus Dow Palmer in 1875.
- Caesar Rodney from Delaware, marble, by Bryant Baker in 1934.
- Samuel Adams from Massachusetts, marble, by Anne Whitney in 1876.
- Nathanael Greene from Rhode Island, marble, by Henry Kirke Brown in 1870.
- John C. Calhoun from South Carolina, marble, by Frederick Ruckstull in 1910.
- Crawford W. Long from Georgia, marble, by J. Massey Rhind in 1926.
- John Peter Gabriel Muhlenberg from Pennsylvania, marble, by Blanche Nevin in 1889.
- Charles Brantley Aycock from North Carolina, bronze, by Charles Keck in 1932.
- Roger Sherman from Connecticut, marble, by Chauncey B. Ives in 1872.
- Charles Carroll from Maryland, bronze, by Richard E. Brooks in 1903.
- Robert E. Lee from Virginia, bronze, by Edward V. Valentine in 1934.
- Richard Stockton from New Jersey, marble, by Henry Kirke Brown in 1888.
- John Stark from New Hampshire, marble, by Carl Conrads in 1894.